Why Your Agile Organisation Needs To Shift From A Mindset of Certainty To A Mindset of Discovery

by Mental Toughness Partners on May. 29, 2018

Each year brings technological change with a multiplier that creates challenges and opportunities in equal measure. In today’s dynamic markets, continuous rapid change also requires a rapid change in mindset for us as individuals and organisations.

In this excellent Mckinsey short post, authors Carolyn Dewar, Sherine Ebrahim and Michael Lurie suggest that leaders need very different mindsets from those used to manage traditional organisations in less-demanding times.

They describe three primary mindset shifts are required to lead agile organisations designed for innovation, collaboration and value creation.

Innovation: From certainty to discovery

Traditional organisations operate through detailed linear planning and control. This works well in a known environment where leaders can foresee the future. This mindset of certainty is about playing not to lose, being in control, and replicating the past.

But today when the future largely is unknowable, detailed planning can be a hindrance. The focus must shift to innovation, continually experimenting, testing, and learning. This mindset of discovery is about playing to win, exploring unknown territory, and creating a new future.

At Illinois Tool Works, a leading diversified maker of specialized industrial equipment, a mindset of discovery has been central to its sustained success over decades. A prolific innovator with over 17,000 granted and pending patents, many of ITW’s product innovations emerge from engineer-to-engineer discussions with customers, each focused on developing an ingenious solution to a specific customer problem.

Collaboration: From authority to partnership

Traditional organisations are designed as siloed hierarchies based on a mindset of authority. The relationship between leaders and teams is one of superior to subordinate. People lower down the career ladder defer to and comply with the wishes of people at more senior levels. In return, leaders protect and reward their people.

Designed for collaboration, agile organisations employ networks of autonomous teams. This requires an underlying mindset partnership, of managing by agreement. Such organisations strive to tap into ideas, skills, and strengths through freedom, trust, and accountability, which requires peer-to-peer relationships based on mutual acceptance and respect.

This partnership mindset is central to the success of Morning Star, the world’s largest tomato processor. It empowers autonomous teams to operate without formal leaders, reflecting a deep commitment to freedom and collaboration within and across teams. Every year, colleagues negotiate a “colleague letter of understanding” with their stakeholders that formally commits to partnership, accountability, and reciprocity.

Value Creation: From scarcity to abundance

In stable, slowly evolving markets, companies seek to maximize their share at the expense of others to boost shareholder value. The underlying premise signifies scarcity; limited opportunities and resources, and a win-lose approach. This mindset is about maximizing share of an existing pie.

Today’s markets, however, evolve continually and rapidly, offering unprecedented challenges and opportunities. To deliver results today, leaders must view their markets and businesses with a mindset of abundance that recognizes the unlimited resources and potential available to their organisations. They must grow a larger pie, by continually seeking win-win options that deliver value simultaneously to all stakeholders.

What Apple did after Steve Jobs’ return demonstrates this shift to abundance. Instead of continuing to do everything in-house, Apple launched iTunes and then the App Store, inviting what became tens of thousands of partners to co-create an unprecedented ecosystem. By sharing and massively expanding the supply pool in this way, Apple unlocked enormous demand and value potential, enabling it become one of the most valuable companies in the world.

The traditional mindsets of scarcity, authority and certainty no longer fit today’s ever-changing world. They cause us to focus inward and backward, and lose sight of amazing opportunities. Making the three fundamental shifts to mindsets of abundance, partnership and discovery lets us look outward and forward, unleashing the full potential of our people and organisations.